News

Government failure on telehealth services puts vulnerable patients at risk

The AMA says the refusal of the Minister for Health, Mark Butler, to extend COVID-19 telehealth services would put vulnerable patients at risk by limiting their telephone access to GPs and force them to have face-to-face contact.

The AMA says the refusal of the Minister for Health, Mark Butler, to extend COVID-19 telehealth services would put vulnerable patients at risk by limiting their telephone access to GPs and force them to have face-to-face contact.

AMA President Dr Omar Khorshid said the refusal of the Government to extend Medicare-funded COVID-19 telehealth services from 1 July would limit vulnerable patients’ telephone access to doctors.

“This decision means telephone access to doctors will be significantly limited and this will hit vulnerable patients hardest, including those who do not have access to high bandwidth internet and those who can’t operate the necessary IT systems,” he said.

“This means that older patients, those with chronic health conditions including cancers and those who are immune suppressed will have less access to care from tomorrow and may be put at increased risk of contracting COVID if they now have to attend their doctor’s appointment
face-to-face.

“Each day thousands of Australians are required to self-isolate because of a COVID-19 infection and as a close contact. Many of these people will not be able to continue to access medical care when they need it.”

Dr Khorshid said tens of thousands of COVID-19 cases were reported each day, thousands of people were in hospital and a tragic number of deaths were reported each day. The emergence of new sub-variants of Omicron were likely to drive case numbers higher.

“Broad access to Medicare-funded telehealth has played a critical part in the pandemic response, reducing exposure to the virus and supporting people in self-isolation to be able to access critical medical care.

"The Labor Party criticised the former government’s pandemic response over the past two years and in not extending access to COVID telehealth settings it must now face the same criticism.

“Although the Government has acknowledged the need for ongoing support of the hospital sector with an extension of COVID-19 hospital funding, it has failed to take a consistent approach when it comes to patients accessing care from their GP or specialist.

“We understand the Government has had to make a lot of decisions in a very short timeframe since it won the election. It appears to the AMA that this decision has been rushed and the AMA will work to encourage the Government to rethink its approach and put our most vulnerable patients first.”

Related topics